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#book rec – @natalunasans on Tumblr
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(((nataluna)))

@natalunasans / natalunasans.tumblr.com

[natalunasans on AO3 & insta] inactive doll tumblr @actionfiguresfanart
autistic, agnostic, ✡️,
🇮🇱☮️🇵🇸 (2-state zionist),
she/her, community college instructor, old.
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You can get 20% off THE FORBIDDEN BOOK at Porter Square Books through the month of November! Online or in person! And many thanks to Katherine for staff picking 🥰

“The Forbidden book is the perfect follow up to the masterpiece that was When the Angels Left the Old Country. When Sorel escapes from her home right before her wedding she quickly finds herself enveloped in a mystery. Steeped in Jewish folklore and magic, I could not put this book down. The characters are all amazing --Sorel is brash in the best way, and I love them, and the ending had the perfect pay off.”

- Katherine

I also want to shout out Leora at Belmont Books who staff picked ANGELS this month.

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reblogged

OUT NOW! Master Works, a charity anthology where companions meet the Doctors greatest frenemy, can be bought until July 17th!

🌟 Proceeds go to Migrant Justice / Justicia Migrante! 🌟

📚 Buy a printed book at https://tinyurl.com/masterworkspaper

This limited-edition anthology will only be available for a short time [through July 17th, 2020, EST], so act fast! Master Works will be gone faster than one of the Master’s ill-advised alliances with an alien species that they know nothing about! [Only the result won’t be so disastrous. Probably.]

Artist and co-graphic designer of this cover is yours truly. This art piece is HUGE, so I will make more posts with details + the same links and update my social medias accordingly.

(If you also wanna send a few dollars my way and buy cool stuff with this picture, check out my personal redbubble shop: www.redbubble.com/people/sonjaarts/shop )

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ethiopienne

We Read Too is a book resource app created by Kaya Thomas (@kthomas901) that includes over 300 Children’s and YA books written by authors of color featuring characters of color. You can browse, search, view the details of every book as well as suggest any books that should be added in the app. This resource is for all people of color who have felt misrepresented or forgotten when finding books to read. Help the app grow by downloading it for free here (http://bit.ly/1mUfe2F), rating and reviewing the app, and suggesting new books & genres that should be included! Follow @WeReadTooApp on twitter and like Facebook page at facebook.com/WeReadTooApp for updates. 

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What if the ‘clever thief in fantasy lit’ trope could be a happy lesbian?

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natalunasans
shiraglassman:
Review originally posted on The Lesbrary.
Fantasy literature is rife with ‘clever thief’ protagonists for the vicarious entertainment of the virtuous, like Bilbo Baggins, but most of them are not even female, let alone lesbians. Swan’s Braid and other Tales of Terizan by Tanya Huff gives us the wily but honorable Terizan, who waltzes away from the first story in her collection with the affection of a female mercenary with whom she maintains a casual romance for the remainder of the book. Most of Terizan’s adventures aren’t love stories, but “capers”–she gets assignments from the Thieves’ Guild, which she joined pretty much for their health insurance plan (“the guild takes care of its own,” and she’s worried about what would happen if she ever got more seriously hurt during one of her falls from a mark’s window. It’s that kind of book.)
The plots themselves are pretty clever, with inflection points and twists and rising action and punch lines, reminding me of Maurice Leblanc’s dashing gentleman burglar Arsène Lupin, only in a fantasy setting with a lesbian heroine. Whether Terizan’s adversary is a ghost, a wizard, a prince, or the cult of an upstart goddess, reading about her besting them was satisfying and not stressful at all because they’re written in that “good old fashioned fun” way, not grimdark.
The prose is easy to follow, with the occasional evocative bit like “[…]sales pitches as wilted as the vegetables[…]” Huff’s worldbuilding is unobtrusive and “generic fantasy” enough to be pretty easy to understand, yet with enough originality that I didn’t feel like I was reading homage or parody. And I really can’t say enough good things about how relaxing it is to read a story about a woman Doing Things in a shady underworld without having to fear gendered violence. The villains in this book are mostly men, but their offensives and defenses against Terizan never include a sexual element.
I love so much about what Terizan’s stories have and don’t have. Her best friend is a bisexual male sex worker, her adventures aren’t gendered (in other words, she gets to interact with her fictional universe pretty much the way male characters usually get to), and her three bosses at the Guild are a man, a woman, and someone who “could be either or neither” whose gender is never further discussed. These days things like this are becoming easier to find in SFF, at least if you’re like me and play Heimdahl with indie LGBT publishing, but this particular story was written in the NINETIES. So I quietly hold this up to those who go around leaving skeptical, ossified reviews on fiction with nonbinary characters.
I would love to see these done in graphic novel form.
(Warning for the word ‘whore’ used a few times; I think it was only said by the sex worker character but I can’t actually remember and I returned my eBook to the library already.)
Tanya Huff is pure spun gold. I love her books so, so much. (also, her. She’s as charming in person as her books are on the page.) 
My favourite series will always be the Blood books - aka, What If Henry Fitzroy, bastard son of Henry VIII, didn’t die in the 1500s. What If he was actually a bisexual vampire romance novelist living in Toronto in the 1990s? And What If the cumudgeonly private eye he ends up helping (as supernatural critters do) was a woman with a progressive disability? 
The books have some dark moments, but they’re not GrimDark, and you know that things will come out all right in the end. They’re also wonderfully funny, and Vicki is one of my favourite protagonists of all time. 
Seriously. Start with Blood Price and do not look back. 

want to read these now!!

sorry if this is offtopic but in case people would like both: the Quicksilver Adventures is another good series of capers featuring a queer protagonist and his afrolatina cyborg best-friend/partner-in-crime (they aren’t romantically involved because he isn’t her type, but they each have their separate romances as major or minor subplots)... it’s set in a near-ish interplanetary future with convincing worldbuilding and treats real issues with real (though not always legal) justice and not too much darkness (happy endings)...

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Okay here me out.

A young adult novel written by a disabled author.

Where the main character gets into an accident and must use a wheelchair.

(And is written fairly accurately as the author is also in a wheelchair.)

There are more disabled characters than you can count.

The ones who aren’t disabled are the enemies.

It takes place in an alternate version of the 1950s, at an institution for people with disabilities and superabilities.

You see how the disabilities relate to the superabilities (superpowers). 

The main character goes through the stages of grief after she realizes that she won’t be able to walk again but she is able to come out of it, not because of a love interest, but because she’s able to find her own strength. (And hit her mentor in the face with a weight.)

In fact, the main character doesn’t have any love interest at all.

None.

You could make the argument that she’s aromantic/asexual.

And the author would totally support that argument.

But despite not having a love interest, the main character is truly cared for, especially by her gruff mentor with a heart of gold.

Did somebody say found families and father-figure-daughter-figure relationships?

Also there’s an interracial couple thirty years in the making. 

And an underground resistance of students with disabilities trying to prove that they’re stronger than people think.

And in the end, they’re able to save the day.

And there are a lot of hugs.

And a lot of chocolate milk.

And the main character comes to terms with the fact that her biological family is horrible but she’s fine with that because she’s got the gruff mentor with a heart of gold who may or may not be in the CIA and also knew Al Capone.

And nobody dies.

And nobody dies.

And nobody kills themselves because they think that their lives are over now that they are in fact disabled.

Unlike some other books!

Oh and there’s a pig in a wheelchair.

And it’s all written by a disabled college student who really really needs the money for college and her apartment because apparently life is expensive (who knew?)

And it’s not the best written and it’s not error free but it was written with a lot of heart and a lot of passion in the early hours of the morning because that’s when the author had free time. But if nothing else, it has amazing disability representation. And a pig in a wheelchair.

Interested?

Well, guess what?

That author is me, that book is mine, that book is published, that book is available for you to buy, that book even comes in a paperback version so that you can hold in your hands a story with disability representation in which none of the characters die or talk about how they’re a burden and how they’re lives are over (well, Juniper does once but Ryder knocks some sense into her.)

It’s called The Defectives and you can buy it here:

So if you’re looking for disability representation that doesn’t end with death and you want to help out a novice disabled author who really needs the money, please consider buying this book.

If nothing else, please signal boost!

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lady-averie

So while doing some pirate research for the play I’m writing I stumbled upon one of the most amazing things I’ve ever read. In the 5th century A.D. there was a Scandinavian princess called Alwilda who’s father tried to set her up to marry Alf, the Prince of Denmark. Alwilda wasn’t cool with this so she and some female companions dressed as men, stole a ship, and sailed away. Eventually they met a company of pirates who were in need of a new captain and they were so captivated by her that they elected her as their new leader. Her crew became so infamous that Prince Alf was sent out to stop them. When their ships met he took Alwilda prisoner and she was so impressed by Alf’s skill that she agreed to marry him after all and eventually became the Queen of Denmark.

I stopped caring whether this was factually accurate about halfway through because it’s completely AWESOME.

Medievalist here for triumphant fact-checking: this story is, if not true, at least true according to the history of the Danes (Gesta Danorum) written in the 12th century by Saxo Grammaticus. You can read his account of Alwilda’s story in the original Latin here, or in English translation here. Highlights include:

She exchanged woman’s for man’s attire, and, no longer the most modest of maidens, began the life of a warlike rover. Enrolling in her service many maidens who were of the same mind, she happened to come to a spot where a band of rovers were lamenting the death of their captain, who had been lost in war; they made her their rover captain.

I love the implication that there were lots of Danish maidens just WAITING for the opportunity of a life of piracy…

Reblogging my old post for this A+ addition to it

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natalunasans

you guys you guys there's a book like this!

The Princess and The Sea https://www.amazon.com/dp/B010OI70LY/

very recommended!

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i'm supposed to be marking papers and instead i've fallen into London Falling

http://www.paulcornell.com/books/novels/london-falling/ it's kind of hard to describe right now because i'm still near the beginning and none of the supernatural part has been explained yet... but something i like so far: the small visual details. also, the fact that every time the PoV switches (chapter or section) both of these guys seem sincere... and yet they don't trust each other at all. so it keeps you wondering.

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IF YOU EVER NEED SOMETHING TO READ READ THIS

OK ARE YOU EVER IN NEED OF BOOK RECOMMENDATIONS BUT DON’T KNOW WHAT TO READ NEXT?

I present to you, straight from the internet, whichbook:

Here’s how it works: You click the link, and choose four categories and the extent to which these categories matter:

Then click “go” and it’ll come up with a number of books you might like.

DON’T LIKE THE CATEGORIES? NO PROBLEM - see this little thing:

THIS LITTLE THING WILL TAKE YOU TO THIS SLIGHTLY LARGER THING WHERE YOU CAN CHOOSE A BOOK BASED ON THE FOLLOWING:

YOU NOW HAVE NO EXCUSE TO NOT BE READING SOMETHING BECAUSE WHATEVER YOU WANT THIS SITE WILL COME UP WITH IT.

… Apart from bisexual retired alien dudes. No books on that. Yet.

NONHUMAN CATEGORIES

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